Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 June 1938 — Page 18

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Summer Flowers Form Colorful Setting for Test-Chambers Wedding.

Young City Couple Leaves on Marriage Trip After Ceremony at Home of Bride; Popular in Younger Set.

By VIRGINIA MOORHEAD MANNON A profusion of bright summer flowers in the house and garden formed the background for the marriage of Miss Judith Chambers to Charles Edward Test, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald N. Test, which was celebrated at 4:30 yesterday afternoon at the home of the bride's

parents, Mr. and Mrs. David Laurance Chambers. The Rt. Rev. Joseph M. Francis, bishop of the Episcopal diocese of Indianapolis, read the marriage service which united two prominent Indianapolis families. Preceding the ceremony the Orloff trio played a program of bridal music which included “Romance” (Wieniaski), “Song to the Evening Star” from “Tannhaeuser” (Wagner), “Serenade” from “Ein Kleine Nacht Musik” (Mozart) and “Romance” (Debussy). The bridal party entered to the strains of Lohengrin’s Wedding March plaved on a small organ and during the service the “Adagio” from “The Moonlight Sonata” (Beethoven) was played. An old-fashioned bouquet was tied at the foot of the smilaxentwined stairway which the bridal party descended. Delphinium, daisies and summer flowers filled a large pocket vase at the library entrance and boxes of summer flowers were placed at the windows in the hallway. Tall vases of garden flowers decorated the sun porch. Garlands of lilies of the valley set on huckleberry foliage covered the panel over the fireplace in the living room where the ceremony was performed. On the mantel were vases of lilies of the valley and Johanna Hill roses and at each side of the fireplace stood a single ivory cathdral candle. A white satin kneeling cushion was placed on the red carpet which led up to the fireplace, The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, wore her mother’s wedding+«gown of old ivory satin with short puffed sleeves and medium length train, The waist was gathered in soft folds below the square neckline. Her fingertip tulle veil was caught with orange blossoms. A cascade of ivory satin ribbon fell from her bouquet of lilies of the valley and white hybrid orchids. Miss Evelyn Chambers, who was her sister's maid of honor, wore a full-skirted gown of pale green embroidered muslin and small white hat trimmed with lilies of the valley and black velvet streamers. She carried an arm bouquet of crimson roses, mahogany pansies and lilies of the valley from which also fell back velvet streamers. Donald N. Test Jr. was his brother's best man and David Laurance Chambers Jr. brother of the bride, John S. Blay of Detroit and Irving Lemaux Jr. were ushers, Mrs. Chambers wore a gown of pastel blue lace with a spray of purple-throated canhamia orchids and Mrs. Test, mother of the bridegroom, wore a shrimp pink lace gown and matching straw picture hat with a black veil caught with small pink roses falling in streamers at the back. Her corsage was of deep purple cattleya orchids. At the reception following the ceremony the table on which the bride's cake formed the centerpiece was laid with an ivory satin cloth festooned in Victorian style with strands of smilax. The miniature bridal couple which surmounted the cake was used on the cake at the 50th wedding anniversary of the bride's grandparents, the late Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Taggart. Low bowls at either end of the table held lilies of the valley, white roses and stephanotis. Mr. and Mrs. Test have left for their wedding trip. With her traveling dress of navy and white figured silk, Mrs. Test wore a navy coat and hat, blue and white accessories and lavendar orchids Both the bride and bridegroom are popular members of the younger set. Mrs. Test was graduated from Tudor Hall and Vassar College. She is a member of the Indianapolis Junior League and Dramatic Club, Mr. Test is a graduate of Park School and Princeton University. At Princeton he was a member of Tower Club. Among the out-of-town guests who attended the wedding were Philip Manker and Mr. Blay of Detroit and John Kennedy of Buffalo, N. Y.

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Indiana D. A. R. Announces

New Committee Chairmen!

| Mrs. George F. Duncan, 1125 Law-

Committee chairmen for the Indiana Daughters of the American Revolution were announced today by Mrs. William H. Schlosser, state regent, in “The Wheel,” organization bulletin,

They are: Mrs. Ralph Chappell, ® Club Meetings

Indianapolis, advancement of American music; Mrs. Louis D. Keck, Mt. The Victorian chapter, International Travel-Study Club, held

Vernon, Americanism; Mrs. Frank C. Ball, Muncie, approved schools; Mrs. | basket dinner today noon at Garfield | Park. Mrs. G. B. Ritter was pro-

William T. Morgan, Bloomington, | conservation; Mrs. L. L. Bomber- | | ram chairman. hh %

ger, Hammond, correct use of flag; Mrs. William Rohr was to be

Mrs. R. B. Hougham, Franklin, good citizenship pilgrimage; Mrs. Charles hostess to the Delta Gamma Mothers Club today.

F. Williams Jr, Lafayette, Good Citizen Pilgrim’s Club; Mrs. Voyle Martindale, Cambridge City, na-| tional historical magazine; Mrs. H.| G. Ervin, Hartford City, citizenship |

" manual and Mrs, Harry Potter,| ogy venetian chapter, InternaPrinceton, museum. | tional Travel-Study Club, will meet Student loan committee members! Monday for luncheon with Mrs. are Mrs. James A. Coats, Veeders- ployd Church. burg; Mrs. Herbert A. Meyer, Han-

= = 2 over; Mrs. I. S. Valentine, Frank-| The Emera Club was to meet this lin; Mrs. Truman G.

Yuncker, | evening with Miss Margaret Alberts. Greencastle; Mrs. W. D. Price, Mun- | § 4 cie; Miss Blanche Miller, Lafayette; | Mrs. Wilbur Mohr was to be Mrs. 8S. D. Robinson, Bloomington; | hostess this evening to the Inter Mrs. Robert L. Hudson, Richmond, | Libros Club. A literary discussion and Miss Louise Kleiser, Terre | was to be a feature of the program. Haute. Continuing the list of chairmen are Mrs. Luke Duffy, Rushville, Ellis Island; Mrs. Kenneth A. Riner, | 4u24 N. Capitol Ave. Mentone, filing and lending bureau; |

= = EJ i The Butler Alumnae Literary | Club is to meet tomorrow afternoon

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Members of Bus

ness Club

Map Schedules tor Holidays

Alarm clocks in several Indianapolis homes and apartments will reap ‘well-earned vacations the next two months when local Business and Professional Club members don sport togs for summer holidays.

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{at the home of Miss LaVerne Ridlen,

Miss Mary Carr Guernsey, Charles- | town, genealogical records; Mrs. Paul Theiry, Newcastle, Girl Homemakers; Mrs. Edward L. Townley, | Vincennes, Harrison mansion; Mus, | Winfield 8S. Crum, West Lafayette; | Mrs. Charles Wolf, Peru; Mrs, S. A. | Morrison, Frankfort and Mrs. Ros- | coe Haymond, Columbus, historical | research; Mrs. E. H. Darrach, In-| dianapolis, Indiana room, Memorial | Continental Hall, and Mrs. Porter J. Coultas, Tell City, junior Ameri- | can citizens. Concluding the roster are Mrs. Wilbur Johnson, Indianapolis; Miss | Marion Gross, Laporte; Mrs. Robert | H. King, Danville, and Miss Mabel

Claxton, French Lick, junior mem- | Irene Somoya and Lenore Rushton. |

bership. Mrs. Thomas C. Ely, Plymouth, legislative; Mrs. Howard L. | Hancock, Rockville, motion pictures; | Mrs. J. C. Webb, Portland, national | defense through patriotic education; | Mrs. T. C. Frazer, Warsaw and Miss | Elvira Oaks, Laporte, national mem- | bership. Mrs. Henry B. Wilson, Delphi, | press relations; Mrs. Frank R.| Baker, and Miss Mary Hostetter, Indianapolis; Mrs. William Burns Duff, Ft. Wayne; Mrs. J. C. Bush Jr,, | Gary; Mrs. Floyd T. Jones, Lafay- | ette;: Mrs. C. S. Nuckols, Anderson; Mrs. Ivan Loer, Evansville; Mrs. R. G. Nunn, Terre Haute, and Mrs. | Norris Wayne, Elkhart, radio.

Mrs. McLain’s Pupils To Present Program|

Mrs. C. FP. McLain is to present her pupils in a piano recital at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Cropsey Auditorium of the Centrai Library. i Those participating are to be | Robert Lincks, Margaret Henning, | virginia Galloway, Donald Mueller, | June Waters, Hazel Smith, Jean | Hunt, Gladys York, Mary Ann} Hunt, Martha Jean Clark, Robert McMillan, Joan Butcher, Anne Mueiler, Mary Margaret Galloway, Amelia Jacobs, Phyllis Jean Webb, Jeanne Thorne, Virginia Pruitt, | John McGuire and Harry Smith. Also on the program are to be Marjorie Fox, reader; Harry Galloway, violinist, and Mabel Hill, violinist,

Alpha Delta Tau

Dance Arranged

Alpha Delta Tau Sorority will celebrate its 11th anniversary with a dinner and dance tomorrow night at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Initiation services for nine pledges will precede the dinner. They are

Goldman, Mary Jane Hidgon, Virginia Cervienic, Martha Wright,

Miss Margaret Moylan, retiring president, wili be toastmaster. Mrs. Elizabeth Doll, sorority mother, will attend. Bob McKittrick's Orchestra is to provide music for dancing. Officers for the coming year include Miss Athalene Gascho, president; Miss Jane Garner, vice president; Miss Ann Lee, recording secretary; Miss Cecelia O'Mahoney,

| coresponding secretary; Miss Dor-

othy Ale, treasurer; Miss Irene Mays, sergeant-at-arms; Miss Eunice Haynes, chaplain, and Miss

| Anne Reigner, attorney-general.

Announce Winners

Of Duplicate Game

Mrs. Dorothy Ellis, Block's bridge forum instructor, today announced winners of the Tuesday duplicate game, They are: Section 1, north and south, Mrs. John Kelly and Mrs. Merritt Thompson, first; Mrs. W. A. Myers and Mrs. Arthur Pratt, second. East and west, Mrs. John Demree and Mrs. William Eckhart, first; Mrs. Katherine Laughlin and Mrs. Theta Byrkett, second. Section two, north and south, Mrs. H. C. Mitchell and Mrs. T. S. Munson, first; Mrs. Wayne Warrick and Mrs. George Barrett, second. Section three, north and south, Mrs. Charles Maudlin and Mrs. C. L. McLain, first; Mrs. R. F. Pasho and Mrs. J. F. Rhodes, second. East and west, Mrs. Oliver Williams and Mrs. W. T. Gerrard, first, and Mrs. M. A. Aaron and Mrs. M. A. Blossom, seeond.

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‘McHenry-Duncan Nuptials Set 1 ‘Sunken Gardens

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Sunken gardens will provide a setting for the marriage of Miss | Maxine Duncan to Frank McHenry | at sundown today. |

The gardens are located at the | Tau, national legal sorority.

{ home of the bride's parents, Mr. and |

| rence Ave. The bride, who is to be given in marriage by her father, will wear a! | white peasant-styled frock with | white accessories and a corsage of | gardenias. Miss Dorothy Schussler is to be | the bride's only attendant. She will also wear white with white acces- | sories and a corsage of roses. Jack | | Hendrickson is to be best man. | A reception for more than 30 | guests will follow the ceremony at | the Duncan home. After a trip! | north, the couple will be at home | late this month at 1334 Carroliton | Ave, !

| Riley Cheer Guild

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To End Program With Picnic Here

The Riley Cheer Guild is to | conclude its year’s program with 2) | picnic luncheon Tuesday at te} {country home of Mrs. George E. | | Bomberger, Allisonville Road. | The vear's business will be con- | cluded and summer plans outlined. | The guild will resume its regular | meetings Sept. 20. Several local groups will continue to sew in the {guild rooms at the Riley Hospital| during the summer months. | Cohostesses for the picnic will be | | Mesdames William O. Cheeseman, | | G. A. Garrettson, Roy Johnson, J. | B. Sigel, R. M. Pettie and A. D. | Green. | | The Seventh Christian Church | unit received recognition for the | third consecutive year at the recent

: ; ed | | the Misses Margaret Bruce, Kather- | June breakfast for having sewe ine Dugan, Joyce Goldman, Merle | 18 full days at the hospital.

Little | {Orphan Annie chapter of the] { Francis Willard W. C. T. U. was | second with 15 days sewing work. | | Roses have been the customary | award and it is planned to present a cup next year. \ The guild recently added a number of sewing machines to the work | rooms. Its membership includes | 185 chapters in Indiana.

Riviera to Hear

Own Glee Club

The Riviera Glee Club will make its first appearance tonight at the club dance for adults. Over 300 members and their guests are expected to attend the event spon-

sored by the Riviera Boosters. Members of the musical group in- | clude Messrs. and Mesdames Fran- | cis Joy, Fred P. Green, Russell Edwards; Mesdames G. A. Retherford, Harvey Saunders, Clyde V. Mantgomery, E. P. Bayless, E. J. Ruddle, Charies M. Maxwell, Oscar Marsischke, Varjo Anderson, E. D. Wilhite, E. R. Allen, Roy Huse, William Hughes; Misses Lee Lacy, Judy Peele, Julianna Hess, Sally Green; Messrs. Clay Gullion, Harry Vane Devender, Ruben Winchester, William Pruitt, C. K. Harris, Thomas Fagin. Mrs. William Holland is accompanist. Mrs. Green is director and Mrs. Anderson is assistant director. Mrs. Green and Mrs. Retherford sing with the Indianapolis Symphonic choir and Mrs. Whipple and Mrs. Anderson appear with the Matinee Musicale,

| Norma S. Skinner.

From typewriters to tennis and dictation to dancing will be the order of the season. Florence K. Thacker, attorney and member of the firm of Thacker & Thacker, is to mix business with pleasure, She plans to attend the convention of the National Association of Women Lawyers at Cleveland July 22. She is national treasurer of the organization, and will spend a day at the American Bar Association meeting before returning home. July 29, 30 and 31 she will attend the convention here of Iota Tau When asked what “real vacation” plans she had made she said that whatever extra time she had would be

I spent in complete relaxation at her

Brown County cabin. North Calls Dobbins’

The North will beckon Mrs. C. R. |

Dobbins and her husband, who are hoping to go by train in August to Toledo to visit friends. From there they hope to go to Detroit and then take a Great Lakes steamer for Toronto. Their favorite sport? “Just sightseeing,” said Mrs. Dobbins, who is Family Welfare Society cashier, A vacation on the installment plan awaits Miss Ruth Carol Alexander, an interior decorator, who will spend one day at a time with friends in Brown County. Mrs. Alfred Geen's husband, who is a candid camera enthusiast, will have plenty of opportunity for aquatic pictures when they spend a week during the middle of July in a cottage at Lake Fisher, Mich. Mrs. Geen is a chemist at Eli Lilly & Co. Later in the season they will go to St. Thomas, Ontario, to visit relatives. Motor to Yellowstone “Twilight on the Trail” will be the theme song of one trio when they depart the first of August for a motor trip to Yellowstone National Park. Included in the party will be Miss Lucille Dichmann, librarian at the South Grove Branch Library; Miss Ann L. Ernsting, secretary at a local fuel company, and Mrs, John Rosenbaum, a former club member. Mrs. Rosenbaum’s husband is in

| charge of the CCC camp at Gardi-

ner Entrance at Yellowstone. The party will go by way of the Badlands in South Dakota and return a month later by way of Denver. Waters of the blue Gulf of Mexico are beckoning Mrs. Clara Benson and Miss Wilmoth A. Benson, who love to swim. Mrs. Benson and Miss Benson hope to return to Biloxi, Miss, for their second consecutive summer. They operate a flower shop here,

Ready for Key West Trip

“Golf, mainly, and swimming,” will be the objects of Miss Edith L. Ambuhl’s motor trip to Key West with a party of friends, beginning Aug. 13. They hope to fly to Cuba before their return around the 27th. Rockbound coasts of Maine and Canada will be the destination of Misses Gladys Williams, Ruby Mc Gee, Ada Dickhut and Adah Huber, all club members, who are to leave for a two weeks’ vacation around July 10. Miss Bess Hiatt will join Miss Phyllis Sewell, Fortville, for a week of motoring through the Great Smoky Mountains beginning July 17. “I'm spending my vacation at 39 Monument Circle,” confessed Mrs. Mrs. Skinner spent her vacation last year ih South America. She recently returned from East Lansing, Mich, where she attended commencement exercises at her alma mater, Michigan State University.

Newlyweds to Make Home at South Bend

Times Special KEWANNA, June 24—Mr. and Mrs. James M. McKinney are at home at South Bend. Mrs. McKinney was Miss Lera Mae Anderson before her marriage Saturday night here. She is a graduate nurse at Epworth Hosptial, South Bend. Mr, McKinney attended Indiana University,

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Five Become Brides in Home and Church Nuptial Ceremonies Here

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Plowman-Platt Photos.

1. Mrs. Franklin Shaffer was Miss Alberta Frantzreb, daughter of Mrs. Emma Frantareb, before her recent marriage. Mr. and Mrs. Shaffer are at home at 1231 Wright St, 2. Mrs. Gaylord Sweeney before her marriage May 22 in the Ema maus Lutheran Church was Miss Dorothy Bernhardt, 3. Miss Virginia Qualter became the bride of Robert Addison in a ceremony read June 12 at the Emerson Avenue Baptist Church. 4. Mrs. Richard C. Krug before her marriage June 3 was Miss Wanda Grounds. 5. Miss Beatrice O'Donnell, daughter of Mrs. Wert O'Donnell, became the bride of Kermit P. Shelton in a service read May 13.

Country Clubs

To Begin Swim Series July 11

July 11 will mark the beginning

| of the swimming meet schedules be-

tween Meridian Hills Country Club, Highland Golf and Country Clb, Hillerest Country Club and Woodstock Club. Meridian Hills swimmers are to compete with Highland at the latter club's pool on the opening day. The same day Hillcrest members will go to the Woodstock Club. The remainder of the schedule will be as follows: Aug. 1, Highland at Meridian Hills and Woodstock at Hillcrest; Aug. 8, Meridian Hills at Woodstock and Hillcrest at Highland; Aug. 15, Hillcrest at Meridian Hills and Woodstock at Highland. On Aug. 22 the annual four-club meet will be held. The place has not been decided upon. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of this week the four clubs have been competing in a marathon contest. All club members were eligible to swim to a mass yardage for their club. The motive was to make club members “swimming conscious and built up” for later competition.

Couple to Make Home In Capital

Times Special SHERIDAN, June 24—The Rev. and Mrs. John Allan Breedlove are at home at 1045 Hanna Ave. Indianapolis, folldwing their marriage

at the United Brethren Church, |

Terhune, Ind. Bishop H. H. Fout read the ceremony Sunday. The bride formerly was Miss Ruthanna Akard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Akard. The Rev. Mr. Breedlove is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Breedlove, University Heights, Indianapolis. Miss Helen Akard was maid /0f honor; bridesmaids were Miss Rachel Breedlove and Miss Mary Nicholson of this city; Miss Lola Mae Anderson, Chicago, and Miss Clarina Schlagel, Clay City. Hildreth Cox and Ruth Elizabeth Cobb were flower girls; the Rev. H. M. Cobb, Clay City, was best man, and Osmar Akard and Omar Breedlove, Indianapolis, Robert Akard and Wendell Lane ushered.

the |

of local school teachers to the 76th tion Convention at New York from

Miss Mildred Finkbiner, School 81, has left for a vacation before the | convention. She will then attend | summer school. Others who will attend are W. Harold Gossett, School 43 principal; E. B. Hargrave, Washington High School vice principal; Miss Wanda Johnson, School 51; Miss Pauline Johnson, School 74; W. B. Johnson, School 30 principal; Mrs. Vivian S. Rankin, School 82; Mrs. Cora Rentschler, School 68: Miss Aurelia LaVergne Smith, School 85; Miss Florence M. Newhouse, School 15, and Miss Charlotte Dercks, School 50. Other Indiana schools also are to i represented,

Convention headquarters are to be |at the Hotel Pennsylvania where registration, exhibits and all state | headquarters are to be located.

Delegation of City Teachers To Attend National Meeting

DeWitt S. Morgan, Schools Superintendent, is to head a delegation

annual National Education AssociaSunday through Thursday.

Miss Robbins Becomes Bride Here Tonight

Miss Mildred Robbins will become the bride of James R. Stewart Jr. at 8 p. m. today at the Street Methodist Church. The Rev. J. N. Greene will officiate. The bride is a daughter of Mr,

and Mrs. James K. Robbins and Mr. Stewart is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James Stewart. Miss Robbins will enter with her father in a gown of white embroid-

FY

Breakfast Scheduled

| The Indianapolis breakfast will [be at 7:30 a. m. Tuesday at the | hotel. Indiana headquarters are to be in Room 358.

Sessions are to begin with Sunday vesper services at 4:30 p. m. at Center Theater, Radio City. The Rev. Dr. Joseph R. Sizoo is to speak. Formal sessions are to close Thursday afternoon at the New York World's Fair Grounds where Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt is to preside at a program featuring international relations. Ambassadors from principal nations are to par- | ticipate. At an early session, Superintendent Harold G. Campbell, New York, is to describe America’s largest city school system which employs more than 32,000 teachers and enrolls more than one million students.

Pearl Buck to Speak

Other speakers are to include J. S. Sunter, officer of the National Union of Teachers of England, and E. A. Hardy, World Federation of Education Associations officer. Leo Wollman of the National Bureau of Economic Research, is to speak on “Labor and Research.” Pearl Buck, author, will discuss the influence of literature on international relations. One session is to be devoted to a symposium of organizations intereste in education. At this session, Dean William PF. Russell, Teachers’ | College, Columbia University, is to preside. Phases of child education to be emphasized at various meetings are individual guidance, the education of emotions and attitudes and the adaption of curriculum and methods to various capacities of children including special projects for the child who is physically and mentally handicapped and the exceptionally gifted child. Life members of NEA will cele- | brate the 10th annual “family re- | union” at the Life Membership Dinner Monday night. Mayor Fiorello H. LaGuardia will welcome delegates and be speaker |

at one of the most important sessions. '

ever oifered.

FELTMA

38 E. Washington

Open Saturday Until 6:30 P.M, ==

Sno: white kid ot susde in a wide as. sottment of styles and patterns both high and low heels. The smartest styles, finest qual: ity and fit we have

N & CURM

St. 103 N. Illinois St.

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ered marquisette with a finger tip veil and bouquet of white roses and | baby's-breath, | Miss Katherine Dietrich, maid of honor, is to be gowned in hyacinth blue embroidered net with an arm bouquet of deep pink roses. Miss Betty Gage, bridesmaid, pink embroidered net with a similar bouquet of paler roses. Dr. Ralph V. Everly will be best man, and ushers will include the groom's brother, Thomas Stewart, and James William Robbins, brother of the bride. Immediately following the ceremony the couple will leave on a wedding trip. After July they are | to be at home at 605 E. Maple Road. The bride attended Indiana University and Mr. Stewart was graduated at the Indianapolis School of Pharmacy.

Kathryn Pearson

Times Special

BLOOMINGTON, June 24.—Miss

bride of the Rev. Elmer Harvey, Indianapolis, at 8 p. mn. today at the Fairview Methodist Church. The Rev. R. O. Pearson, father of the bride-to-be, is to officiate. Miss Pearson is a graduate of Indiana University, where she was a member of Alpha Chi Omega Sorority. She has been teaching at Lapaz. The Rev. Mr. Harvey graduated from DePauw University in 1933 and the Boston University School of Theology in 1936. He did graduate study at the University of Edinburgh and now is associate pastor of the Broaaway Episcopal Church, Indianapolis.

East Tenth

will wear

Is Bride Today

Kathryn Pearson is to become the

Methodist

Prenuptial Dinners Fete Brides-to-Be

‘Shiel-Hardesty Wedding Among Local Rites This Week.

Contrasting with the solemnity of | several satin-and-Lohengrin wedings this week-end is the gaiety of brie dal dinners and bridesmaids’ teas today and tomorrow,

| Mrs. J. C. Hardesty, 542 Central | Court, is to entertain with a bridal | dinner tonight for her daughter, | Gertrude, and her fiance, Roger R. Shiel. | The wedding is to be tomorrow at | St. Joan of Arc Catholic Church, | Decorations tonight are to be in the bridal colors, pink, white and | blue. The wedding rehearsal will , follow, Guests will include Mr. and Mrs, | Walter R. Shiel Sr, the bride groom-to-be's parents; Miss Rosemary Miller, Denver, an aunt of the | bride-to-be, who is here for the wedding, and members of the brie dal party. Miss Louise Hardesty, | Who is to be her sister's only ate , tendant; Walter R. Shiel Jr., who (18 to be his brother's best man, and | Robert Moynahan and John Shiel, who are to usher. | vo» Pastel shades are to predominate (at the bridal dinner tonight given | by Dr. and Mrs. John O. Riester, { 3051 College Ave. for their daughe ter, Kathleen, and Harry Donald DeWire, Miss Riester and | who is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence W. DeWire of Tulsa, | Okla., formerly of Indianapolis, will { be, married tomorrow at the Riese ter home. | Guests tonight will include Mr, and Mrs, DeWire; the Rev. and Mrs. Newman S. Jeffrey, Evansville; Dr. | and Mrs. George P. Riester and the { attendants, Miss Eleanor McClinetock, who is to be maid of honor, and Courtland Coghill, who will be best man.

Mr. DeWire,

” on o Bridesmaids at the wedding of Miss Lucy Kathryn King, daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. Walter King, 549 Somerset Ave. to William H, Lego, were to be honored guests at a tea from 3 to 5 p. m. today given by a sister of the bride-to-be, Mrs, Fred W. Hoffmark, 914 Brad bury St. Mr. Lego is the son of Mrs. Laura Wells Lego, 1040 Fairfield Ave. The wedding is to be at 4 p. m. Sunday at the formal gardens at Butler University. Bridesmaids are Miss Sylvia Bos (lint, Miss Leah Munro and Miss Betty Ann Carr. Mrs. Hoffmark is to be matron of honor Other guests were to include Misses Betty Black. Mary Jane Per« | say, Eileen Curry and Marjorie Hale, on n » Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Marburger were hosts at a bridal dinner last night at Hollyhock Hill honoring | their daughter, Miss Geneva Mare- | burger, and Robert S. Boggs, son {of Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Boggs. | The couple will be married at 8:30 [ p. m. tomorrow at the home of the { bride's parents. Following the dinner, rehearsal | for the wedding was held. Guests with the bridal couple and Mr. and Mrs. Boggs were Messrs, and Mesdames Harold Holtz, Robert Eyles, Eugene Keeney, B. K. Marburger, Miss Mary Maroney, Miss Lucy Kel« ler and Eugene Kerr, 2 n ” An important bridal dinner which has already been announced is that which is to be given tonight by Mr, and Mrs. George Lawrence Ramey at their home, 563868 Washington Blvd., for their daughter, Miss Mare garet, and her fiance, Kenneth E Kinnear. The Kinnear-Ramey nuptials are to be read at 8:30 p. m. Saturday at the TakLernacle Presbyterian Church, Guests will include members of the bridal party. They are Mrs Robert H. Wiseheart, who is to be her sister's matron-of-honor; Miss Betty Quigley, Greensville, S. C.,, and Miss Jane Morgan, brides« maids, and Miss Suzanne Ramey, a younger sister of the bride, who is to be junior bridesmaid. Ralph E. Triller is to be best man and ushers are to be William S. Ramey, Dr. Wiseheart, Charles Larry Wilson and Foster Shawan, Columbus, O. " " " Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hoke, 3423 Washington Blvd. are to entertain tonight with a bridal dinner for Miss Maxine Lucille Cushman and her fiance, Dr. John Carr Hunt, Ane derson. Miss Cushman and Dr. Hunt are to be married at 4 p. m. tomorrow at the Delta Sigma Delta Frater nity house. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mrs. Hattie A. Cush«~ man, 1647 Park Ave. and Dr. Hunt is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Lee F, Hunt, Anderson.

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FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 1938

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